I have noticed an interesting occurrence when it comes to hunting ethics. It seems that the region of the country and the hunting ethics in the family that one grows up in determines a hunter's ethics. Let me give some examples:
Example #1 I know someone who grew up in upstate New York who is totally fine "party hunting". That is, it doesn't matter who has the deer tag, anyone in the hunting party can take the shot and "we'll figure out the tags later". Then, if too many deer are taken, oh well, some will just go into the freezer without a tag. If hunting his family's land, he rarely even bothers getting a tag. It seems the attitude there acknowledges that there are too many whitetails there so they take care of it, legal or not.
Example #2 Last year, I shot a traditional 3-D shoot with a group of guys that I met at the shoot. As we were shooting, one of the gentleman went on a tyrade about how unethical it was that hunters in Texas tend to use feeders to bait deer. "That's not hunting" he said, even though totally legal in Texas. About an hour later, this same gentleman stated that the best way to hunt blacktail deer was to get some good dogs trained to run the deer to you and a flat shooting rifle. I imagine that some Texas corn-feeder hunters would be totally appalled with the thought of running deer with dogs, although totally legal here in California.
Example #3 I have heard hunters in Montana say that it's not ethical to use trail cameras (it's illegal during the season in MT) but tell that to a Midwest whitetail hunter.
Example #4 In California, it is considered the unpardonable sin to shoot a doe deer (and not legal for most of the state) where in other states you have to shoot a doe before you can shoot a buck.
I'm sure there are lots of other examples but my point: Perhaps we should have a strict personal understanding of our own ethics that we are comfortable with and stick to those tenaciously but, cut our fellow hunters some slack when it comes to hunting ethics, understanding that regional cultural differences exist and there is no "One size fits all" when it comes to hunting ethics. Your thoughts?